By Nakiwala Barbra
Sun, a Chinese-born cryptocurrency entrepreneur, shocked the art and crypto worlds by eating the banana from Maurizio Cattelan’s controversial $6.2 million artwork Comedian. The spectacle took place during a press conference in Hong Kong, where Sun used the moment to highlight parallels between modern art and cryptocurrency.
Sun purchased the infamous artwork—essentially a banana duct-taped to a wall—at a Sotheby’s auction in New York last week, beating out six other bidders. The installation includes the right to display the work and instructions on replacing the fruit, which has been swapped out regularly since its debut in 2019. During the press conference, Sun bit into the banana, declaring, “Eating it at a press conference can also become a part of the artwork’s history.”
This is not the first time Comedian has been consumed. In 2019, a performance artist ate the banana during its exhibition, and a South Korean student repeated the act in 2023. However, neither of them paid millions to do so. Sun’s public consumption of the fruit adds another bizarre layer to the work’s evolving narrative.
Sun likened the artwork to NFTs, comparing its abstract value to that of digital tokens. NFTs, or non-fungible tokens, are digital assets that derive value solely from what people are willing to pay for them, much like the duct-taped banana. Sun, who runs the Tron blockchain network, is a vocal advocate for NFTs and cryptocurrency, both of which are central to his business ventures.
To emphasize the event’s symbolism, every attendee at the press conference received a banana and a roll of duct tape as souvenirs. “Everyone has a banana to eat,” Sun quipped, further blurring the lines between performance art and publicity stunt. A fresh banana for the auction reportedly cost just 35 cents, making it one of the most expensive—and now most infamous—pieces of fruit ever consumed
Sun’s art performance arrives as he faces legal troubles. Last year, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission charged him with selling unregistered security tokens, accusations Sun denies.
Despite the ongoing case, he recently announced a $30 million investment in a crypto project linked to former U.S. President Donald Trump, underscoring his knack for grabbing headlines both inside and outside the crypto world.